Most of us have a love-hate relationship with e-mail. It's allegedly our servant, but, let's face it, we are often its
slaves.

Many of us also have a similar relationship with our e-mail client. Whether we use a desktop e-mail client or access our
messages via a Web-based interface, these are necessary tools that, at their best, can ease the burden of the e-mail
onslaught. And at their worst they help us learn some very bad language.
In corporate circles, that desktop e-mail client is often Microsoft Outlook.

Say what you will about it (nicely—this is a professional forum), but you'll have to admit that Outlook has improved
with each version. It gets easier to use, smarter and plays better with other software. To me, Outlook 2007 is the jewel of
the Microsoft Office 2007 suite. My colleague Dee-Ann LeBlanc is stirring the pot with reasons for companies to pass on
Microsoft Outlook. I, on the other hand, am rather fond of the current iteration, so here are a few reasons why Outlook is
the best choice for your corporate e-mail client.

1. Outlook and Microsoft Exchange Play Well Together

If your e-mail server runs Microsoft Exchange, Outlook is a no-brainer. They go together like bacon and eggs, toast and
coffee, peaches and cream.

Users need to know absolutely nothing to connect. They just fire up Outlook, enter their e-mail address, and it and Exchange
commune. Transparently. That cuts down on IT involvement in client configuration and allows users to switch computers
easily.

2. Outlook Plays Well With Active Directory

Active Directory's authentication extends to Exchange. That means that a user can simply log on to a computer, start Outlook,
and her Active Directory credentials are passed to the Exchange server—no typing or separate logon required.

In fact, since the e-mail address is stored in Active Directory, a user need not even enter that information if
authenticating through AD. Outlook automatically figures out the right e-mail address (and, yes, you can bypass that
functionality if you need to), log you in and you're good to go.

3. Outlook Integrates with Many Devices and Applications

If you're possessed by any sort of PDA or smartphone, there's a way to synch it with Outlook. Some vendors don't even provide
a native personal information manager for their devices, but rely on the fact that most customers have a copy of Outlook that
does the trick very nicely.

Even third party add-on applications for devices like BlackBerry or various Windows Mobile models manage to talk to Outlook.
Skype talks to Outlook. ACT! talks to Outlook. In fact, it's hard to find a desktop tool that doesn't talk to
Outlook. And you can find dozens of little add-ins that extend Outlook even farther—check out Office Addins.com for example.

4. Outlook Makes it Easy to Organize Your Assets

Most e-mail clients offer some sort of rules for sorting and managing e-mail, but Outlook 2007 (in conjunction with Exchange
2007) really raises the bar. Sure, you can sort messages into folders, or forward or redirect them according to selected
criteria. However, you also have the option to send different automatic Out of Office (OOO) messages to internal and external
addresses. For example, users who subscribe to mailing lists may not want to send messages to addresses outside their company
at all (mailing list admins frown on OOO messages, which act like spam to the list), but need to give internal senders
information on who's covering for them.

If you need to follow up on a message, Outlook offers flags of various colors that can be tied to reminders if you need a
friendly nag. A shortcut folder called "Follow Up" gathers links to all flagged messages to make them simple to locate.
And if you want to be sure the boss's messages leap out at you, with a couple of clicks you can make them show up in the
color of your choice in your in-box listing. My boss's mail, for example, is red, and his counterpart with whom I also deal
is an unsubtle lime green. There's no missing either of their tomes in the clutter!

5. Outlook Plays Nicely With SharePoint

Microsoft's SharePoint is a collaborative platform offering tools for building and managing websites, intranets and
workspaces. But Microsoft realizes that many users have neither the time nor the mental bandwidth to log on to yet another
server to check forum discussions or to examine shared documents.

What to do? Simple—Outlook users can opt to receive notifications of new or changed content by e-mail, then click
through to the SharePoint site. They can also add content to a shared workspace or participate in forum discussions by
e-mail, thanks to integration with Outlook and Exchange.

6. Outlook Expedites Workflow

Outlook's messaging isn't limited to mere e-mail. Companies can set up workflows for functions such as online voting. For
example, if a group wants to decide on a location for a festive lunch, the coordinator can send a message offering several
options. Recipients simply click a voting button within the e-mail message to send their responses.

Using Outlook's forms feature, things like requests for time off can be automatically routed to approvers, and the reply
returned to the user.

7. Outlook's User Interface is Familiar

Since Microsoft Office is the market leader in productivity software, the Outlook user interface is familiar to users,
cutting down on the learning curve. Sure, there's a ton of functionality to discover, but the basics are relatively intuitive
to someone who's used to Microsoft Office. That can save a bundle in training costs.
And since the familiarity extends to the development environment, it's also relatively easy for developers using Microsoft
Visual Studio to interface with Outlook, either to add functionality or to tie it to other corporate applications.

8. Outlook Offers Integrated Calendar, Tasks

Outlook includes an address book, calendar, task list and virtual sticky notes. All pieces are integrated; dragging and
dropping an e-mail message can create an appointment or a task or a note. Tasks may be delegated with a click or two. Not
only does the responsible victim get informed of the job he's inherited, but the delegator can get regular status reports.
And with the purchase of the version containing Microsoft Business Contact Manager, Outlook becomes a business in a box for a
small enterprise.

9. Believe It or Not, Outlook Has Pretty Good Security

Yes, I know Microsoft has a bad reputation on the security front. But Outlook 2007, in particular, has good junk mail
filtering (as long as you keep it up-to-date), blocks external content such as web bugs and downloaded images and data from
foreign sites, disallows executable attachments and prevents the execution of ActiveX applets, by default. You can bypass the
security if you like, but it has to be a conscious decision.

10. Outlook Offers One-Stop E-mail

You're not limited to a single account in Outlook. Several accounts using different protocols (including POP3 and IMAP) can
feed into the same set of folders, and be managed with one set of rules. Or, if you prefer, they can be sorted into separate
folders by account. You choose.

Yes, other e-mail clients can integrate multiple accounts, but Outlook's advantage lies in its native support for
Exchange.

Of course, in the grand scheme of things, it all comes down to picking the right tool for the job, and that job is primarily
e-mail. Microsoft Outlook is now robust, secure and versatile enough to be that tool. The extra functionality is just the
cherry on the sundae for lucky Outlook users.